From barrier-island towers to golf-community villas, a big share of Pompano Beach fireplaces live inside associations — which adds a layer of who-approves-what to every fireplace question. Here's how to navigate it without losing the fire.
In most associations, the split follows walls: what's inside your unit — the firebox, the surround, the hearth — is typically yours, while shared flues, roofs, and building exteriors belong to the association. That split decides who calls for service, who approves work, and whose budget carries it.
The practical takeaway: before booking anything beyond interior cleaning, a quick look at your declaration or a note to the property manager saves everyone time. We work smoothly alongside managers and boards, and we're used to being the ones who explain the scope in plain terms.
Oceanfront buildings put fireplace components in the harshest air on the coast, and building rules often reflect hard experience — many towers schedule shared-flue maintenance centrally and restrict what individual owners can alter. That's not bureaucracy; it's a building protecting a shared system.
Where units have individual gas fireplaces, the owner's share is usually the unit itself: keeping it serviced, its glass and gaskets healthy, and its behavior documented. That's squarely our territory, paperwork included.
Golf-community villas and townhome rows sit closer to single-family reality: your chimney is usually yours, with association rules about exterior appearance rather than ownership. Cap replacements and exterior work may need an architectural nod — usually a formality when the materials are right.
We've learned which communities want matching finishes and which just want photos afterward. Telling us the community name up front lets us shape the quote to pass review the first time.
The winning order: identify what you own, loop in the manager where rules apply, then book the right service with documentation the association can file. We provide written scopes and completion notes as a matter of course, which keeps boards comfortable and neighbors unbothered.
If you're not sure where your building's line sits, call anyway — mapping that boundary is a five-minute conversation we have every week, and it costs nothing.
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Typically the association owns shared flues, roofs, and exteriors while owners handle what's inside their unit — but declarations vary. A quick check with your manager settles it, and we work with both sides routinely.
In many communities exterior work needs an architectural sign-off, usually a formality when materials match. We shape quotes and documentation to pass that review the first time.
Usually yes — the unit inside your walls is typically your responsibility and ours to service, with documentation the building can file. Shared-flue work routes through the association.
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